Sunny Acres

Located to the left of San Luis Obispo County's Probation Department, surrounded by empty fields, lies Sunny Acres or known locally as Hells Acres. Off of Johnson, Sunny Acres opened on April 16th, 1931 as a home for orphans and other children who were wards of the government. Children waiting for transfer to foster homes or in trouble with the law were also sent there. It eventually became a juvenile hall and a youth detention facility.

As time went on, the facility grew worse and obtained a poor reputation. Some judges in the area would only send children there if there was absolutely no other alternative. Steel cells were installed for the truly problematic children. And, in 1959, seven of the children confined within actually performed an escape attempt, taking the woman on duty to watch them hostage, tying her up, and stealing her car. They were captured before they were able to escape into Mexico. After this security was increased. Conditions afterwards grew so bad that when a local paper did an article on the facility, they used models in the pictures instead of actual inmates. Funding was low, resources lacking, equipment old and dated, and rumor has it that the facility was over crowded. What had started out as a facility to house poor orphans and children needing new homes had become a jail complete with steel dungeon like cells holding only the worst children with nowhere else to go.

Sunny Acres

Sunny Acres

Sunny Acres

Note there are a lot of over the top legends and misinformation spread about this place. Although it was a detention center for children, it was never an asylum for either the criminally insane or even children. Nobody reportedly died in the fire in 1989 as the structure was abandoned at the time of the fire. No known serial killing nurses, specifically none named Black Bonnet, worked there torturing and killing off the children who resided within. I am not sure if any children ever died while living there and if they did, it was most likely a result of illness, not murder. That being said, there are still quite a few tales of ghost stories, most of them originating from teenagers investigating and partying within the place.

.A new Sunny Acres, unaffiliated with this one is now open on Los Osos Valley Road. It is for those dealing with drug and alcohol addictions as well as some mental illness. It is not for children and is only for adults. Please note, it is considered trespassing to enter the abandoned Sunny Acres and if you do, please wear a mask to protect yourself from the asbestos.

New facilities eventually opened in 1974 and Sunny Acres officially finally closed. It has sat vacant and abandoned ever since. Since then it has been the target of vandals, graffiti artists, trespassers and worse. During the eighties, police reported that they often ended up Sunny Acres twice a week, to stop local youth from drinking and doing drugs within the structure. Police even reported finding an altar that had been used to burn animals. A fire even broke out in the abandoned structure on November 24th, 1989. Supposedly satanic drawings were discovered on the walls as were candles.

No Trespassing

And, of course, when a structure with such an interesting history is left abandoned for so long, it eventually gets a history of being haunted. Not surprisingly there are the stories of hearing phantom children laughing (and even more creepy, children whispering), echoing footsteps where no one is walking, piercing screams, doors slamming suddenly on their own (which is a feat considering many are made of steel), and other ghostly activity. A crying baby has also been heard, despite the structure having only suppose to have housed children ages 10 to 17. Another lost boy pounds on the door to his cell trying to get out. There have been multiple reports of a flickering candle or some other light source being seen in one of the upstairs windows.

Today the asbestos filled structure is completely surrounded by a fence and has multiple "No Trespassing" signs and marks. The closest place to park is the Probation Department a field away. Sunny (or Hells) Acres is in clear view of it. Fields surround the front and back of the structure too, as if, the outside world is afraid to encroach upon the structure. I even ran across a deer trapped in the fenced in grounds behind the building, trying to locate the one way out. The building was renamed in late 2014 to Bishop Street Studios. It is suppose to one day be fixed up and renovated into housing for people with mental illness, which if it's haunting seems scarily fitting. Despite there currently being plans to renovate as of late 2016, nothing has happened.

Somehow it feels like the building continues to find ways to avoid being destroyed or fixed up.